British Columbia

COVID-19 modelling shows B.C. bending the curve of variant cases

Projections from a group of modelling experts show a 30 to 40 per cent decline in transmission rates in B.C. since March.

However, hospitalizations, intensive care admissions will likely remain high through most of May, experts say

Data shows a dip in variant cases in B.C. is likely due to tighter restrictions on activities, individual efforts to wear masks, wash hands and stay physically distant, like the Vancouverites pictured at Sunset Beach on Friday, April 16, 2021. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Efforts by British Columbia health officials and residents are managing to suppress infections that have been driven by COVID-19 variants, according to a group of modelling experts.

Researchers from the University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University and the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences say projections show a 30 to 40 per cent decline in transmission rates since March.

"We're seeing drops in cases and that's fantastic,'' said Sarah Otto, one of the group's members and a professor at UBC.

Data published on the group's website shows the dip likely reflects a combination of vaccination campaigns in hot spots, including job sites and certain communities, tighter restrictions on activities, and individual efforts to wear masks, wash hands and stay physically distant.

Data released by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control shows presumptive variants of concern made up roughly 78 per cent of COVID-19 cases identified in the third week of April.

Otto said the cases that are variants of concern involving strains originating in the United Kingdom and Brazil have not declined as significantly as other COVID-19 cases.

And while the curve is bending, Otto said hospitalizations and intensive care admissions will likely remain high through May because the variants of concern dominate current cases and have more severe symptoms.

"It's going to take more bending or more vaccines, and we're not seeing the vaccination rollout being enough until the end of May,'' Otto said.

Some public health restrictions, or slight variations of those restrictions, will likely need to stay in place to help limit the spread of COVID-19, Otto added.

"The vaccine is not perfectly effective and we don't even have approval to have youth vaccinated yet,'' she said, adding that children and teens will need to be protected until the wider population is fully vaccinated.

Otto urged B.C. residents to not think "life can go back to normal,'' and for people to continue following health orders and restrictions.

Whistler, B.C., had been heavily hit by the COVID-19 variant originating in Brazil, forcing health officials to close ski operations in March.

The Vancouver Coastal Health authority now says a steep decline in cases is attributed to a mass vaccination program for workers and residents.